Supreme Court nominee Neil
Gorsuch presented himself to a sharply divided Senate Judiciary Committee on
Monday [March 20] as a consensus-minded judge, devoted to the law, free of
partisan or ideological bias, and steeped in family, faith, and the common-sense
goodness of his native Colorado.
Gorsuch broke from his
unassuming pose long enough to boast that out of 2,700 appeals in which he has
participated in his decade as a federal judge, 97 percent were decided
unanimously and he was in the majority 99 percent of the time.
"In the West we listen
to one another respectfully," Gorsuch said, "we tolerate and cherish
different points of view, and we seek consensus whenever we can."
Gorsuch spoke for about 20
minutes at the end of a five-hour hearing that began with Republican and
Democratic senators using their 10-minute opening statements to offer
contrasting views about Gorsuch's record on the Tenth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals.
Eleven Republican senators,
beginning with committee chairman Charles Grassley of Iowa, all praised Gorsuch
as eminently qualified and committed to applying the Constitution and laws as
written. But nine Democratic senators, one by one, faulted Gorsuch for taking a
narrow view of constitutional rights and siding too often with corporations
over the interests of workers and consumers.
Gorsuch sat impassively as
the senators laid the groundwork for what could be as much as 16 hours of
questioning over the next two days. However embattled the senators, Gorsuch was
genial and even folksy as he traced his upbringing and thanked his large
extended family in Colorado, "united in love" despite holding
"different political and religious views."
On substance, Gorsuch
opened by affirming his commitment to the law. "I pledge to each of you and to the
American people that, if confirmed, I will do all my powers permit to be a
faithful servant of the Constitution and laws of our great nation," he
said.
Later in the statement, Gorsuch echoed
the Republican senators in depicting what he called "the modest
station" for judges in the U.S. constitutional system. "If judges
were just secret legislators, declaring not what the law is but what they would
like it to be, the very idea of a government by the people and for the people
would be at risk," he said.
The committee's ranking Democrat,
California's Dianne Feinstein, used her opening statement to highlight a
possible risk to abortion rights if Gorsuch were confirmed. Later, Rhode
Island's Sheldon Whitehouse rattled off without naming them a long list of
Roberts Court 5-4 decisions on campaign finance, voting rights, civil rights,
and class actions all decided by five Republican appointees. "Will you
saddle up with the other Republican appointees?" Whitehouse asked
rhetorically.
Gorsuch gave an answer of sorts to the
Democrats' complaints by noting that he had decided cases in favor of Native
Americans seeking to protect tribal lands and in favor of class actions such as
one seeking compensation for victims of nuclear waste pollution. He also said he
had ruled for disabled students, prisoners, and workers alleging civil rights
violations, while ruling against such persons in other cases.
"My decisions have never reflected a
judgment about the people before me," Gorsuch said, "only my best
judgment about the law and facts at issue in each particular case."
Democratic senators made
clear they are smarting from the Republicans' refusal to hold hearings last
year to consider the veteran judge Merrick Galand as President Obama's nominee
to fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Vermont's
Patrick Leahy, a former committee chairman, the tactic "an extraordinary
blockade and totally unprecedented in our history."
Grassley made no reference
to the Garland episode in his remarks, but Texas's junior Republican senator
Ted Cruz defended the strategy. "If Obama had been allowed to fill the
seat," Cruz said, "we would have had a new liberal activist
court."
Cruz was among several
Republicans who praised Gorsuch as an advocate, like Scalia, of originalism in
constitutional interpretation. Feinstein had opened by saying that she was
"troubled" by the philosophy. "I firmly believe that the
Constitution is a living document that was intended to evolve as our people
evolved," she said.
Scalia's seat has been
vacant since his death on Feb. 13, 2016, just before the court was set to holds
the fourth of its seven two-week calendars of arguments. With only eight
justices, the term ended with four cases deadlocked on 4-4 votes and one other sent
back to lower courts to resolve after the justices appeared in arguments to be
split down the middle.
With a 52-48 majority,
Senate Republicans appear to be in a position to confirm the 49-year-old
Gorsuch for the life-tenured seat on the high court. Grassley outlined a
schedule that could bring the nomination to a vote in early April in time for
Gorsuch to join the court for its final two-week argument session late in the
month.
Over the weekend, however,
Connecticut's Democratic senator Richard Blumenthal vowed to use "every
tool we have" to block Gorsuch's confirmation "if he is outside the
mainstream." No Republicans have indicated any likelihood of breaking
ranks on the nomination, but under current rules Republicans need to pick up
eight Democratic votes to meet the 60-vote threshold needed to bring the
nomination to a vote on the floor.
No comments:
Post a Comment